Cap Rate Yield Spread as a Buy or Sell Signal

Real estate investors frequently discuss cap rate spreads as a forward-looking indicator, but is conventional analysis ignoring an important data point? Traditionally, the spread has been thought of in terms of cap rates relative to the 10-year U.S. Treasury bond and Baa corporate bonds. However, there could be another way to look at this time-tested and trusted metric. One such derivative is viewing the cap rate spread between primary and secondary markets.

The logic is as follows: taking a page from the bond market, technicians carefully watch the yield spread between higher-quality and lower-quality bonds to measure investor confidence. The theory goes, as confidence increases, investors are more willing to move up the risk curve and invest in lower-quality bonds for the added yield. As a result, the yield spread between higher-quality bonds typically contracts. Conversely, when investors are less confident about the economy and accompanying credit risk, they are less willing to invest in lower-quality bonds and the yield spread typically widens.

It seems reasonable to expect the primary markets to be valued at lower cap rates as primary markets are viewed as more liquid and contain higher barriers to entry, which usually results in higher NOI growth expectations. Historical data in Figure 1 supports this premise. From 1st quarter 1991 to 1st quarter 2015, primary markets have maintained lower implied cap rates 81.4% of the time.

The Absolute Yield Spread

Moving past the raw cap rate data, let’s turn our attention to the absolute yield spread in Figure 2. To begin, a negative yield spread indicates cap rates for the secondary markets are lower than the primary markets. Meanwhile, a positive yield spread indicates the opposite – cap rates in primary markets are lower than secondary markets. The key takeaway is this: at the extreme, measured as plus or minus two standard deviations, the absolute yield spread provides a contrarian technical signal. When the absolute yield spread moves below a normalized level, this suggests either an inefficient market or an overpricing of risk. This occurred in 3rd quarter 1995 and 4th quarter 2001, and both times proved to be a great time to buy apartments.